140 Ky. 230 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1910
Opinion op the Court by
Reversing.
Appellant was' tried under an indictment charging him with the murder of his son, T. Gr. Beaty, and convicted of the crime of voluntary manslaughter and sentenced for a term of fifteen years in the penitentiary. A reversal was sought mainly because of errors in the instructions given, and this necessitates a statement of the substance of the evidence introduced. The following facts appear without contradiction. Appellánt was fifty-seven years of age; had been afflicted with stomach trouble three or four years, and treated by physicians who testified that he was too weak to do manual labor. The physician who treated him ■ a few hours after the killing stated that his right eye was in a bad condition; that the upper lid of the eye was cut through and had dropped and closed the eye; that his face was badly bruised and swollen. • The shooting occurred at the home in which his son, now deceased, lived with his family. Appellant, however, had reserved a room in the house for his own use, in which he had his furniture and which he occupied a considerable portion of the time. Appellant owned the land upon which the house was situated and upon which there were several other tenants. He also had another farm upon which his- family lived, and whore he stayed the major part of his time. He amved at his son’s on the evening before the trouble in the morning, and occupied the reserved room during the nig Id. He arose early nest morning intending to do some surveying, went to the front porch and took a seat in a chair, and his son was seated on the railing of tbe porch. While thus situated, Della Brown and her mother came and passed through the house into the kitchen where the son’s wife was cooking breakfast. In a few minutes Della Brown returned from the kitchen with a bridle in her hand. As to what took place after this there is conflict in the testimony. The first witness for the Commonwealth, Annie Belle Beaty, the widow of the
Della Brown and her mother, witnesses for the Commonwealth, in substance, testified that Della Brown started to catch a horse to go to the store, that she had a bridle in her hand and appellant claimed it when she went out onto the porch; that at the moment he did this the mother and wife of the deceased arrived on J'he porch, and Mrs. Brown asked appellant what he had against her child that he wanted to kill her; that he said he had nothing, and asked her if she was going to get mad at him. They further stated that at this time Nannie Belle Beatv asked appellant why he always raised fusses with the neighbor women who came there, and he called her a bad name; that she, Nannie Belle Beutv, drew a stick and started to strike appellant while he was still sitting; that he jumped and threw up his right’ hand to ward off the blow and caught at her with his left hand and started to draw his pistol; that his son, T. Gr. Beaty, jumped and caught him. These two witnesses stated that tbe3r ran at this'time, and as they we^e going around the corner of the house, heard the pistol fire. Appellant proved by several witnesses that appellant said to them that he made a mistake, — that he intended to shoot the deceased’s wife and shot “Dock,” his son. The Commonwealth introduced what purported to be two dying declarations of T. G-. Beaty. The first was by Westmoreland, a tenant on the farm, which it
“I heard a racket out on the portico between pa and Della Brown, and I went out to settle it. Pa drew his pistol, and I grabbed him by the wrist and it shocked me so I turned him loose, and pa said, ‘G--D-yon I come mighty near shooting you last night,’ and shot me.” '
We copy the testimony of C. P. Huff in full as to the second alleged dying declaration of T.G. Beaty:
“I went to the home of T. G. Beaty about sundown on the day he was shot;T went with Mr. P. A. Madison, sheriff of Clinton county. T. G. Beaty said he was bound to die and could not get well. P. A. Madison told T. G. Beaty that the county judge had told us to take a statement about the matter, and then he asked T. G. Beaty how it happened, and T. G. Beaty replied: ‘In the beginning pa drew his pistol on my wife, Nannie Belle Beaty, and I grabbed him, and in the scuffle he shot me; it was no accident.’ T. G. Beaty’s mother then said: ‘Deck, you know your pa never aimed to shoot vou.’ Then T. G. Beatv said: ‘I think it was no accident.’ Then he said: ‘Pa said, I come G— D — • nigh shooting you last night, and he shot me; he was trying to shoot me when he did. ’ At this time some of the persons present began to ask him some questions, and Mr. Madison called me out and said he could not take the statement in that way and that we would have to stop, and we stopped and did not take any more. I wrote down what T. G. Beaty said' and read it over to him, and he said it was correct, but that he was too weak to sign it, and he did not sign it. ”
At the close of Huff’s testimony the court admonished the jury not to consider the statement of T. G. Beaty: “I think it was no accident.”
The substance bf appellant’s testimonv is that when Della Brown came out onto the porch with the bridle in her. hand, he said to her that it was his, a,nd asked her to give it to him; that he said it in fun; that he did not draw nor attempt to draw his pistol upon her; that about this time his son’s wife and Mrs. Brown arrived on the porch, and Mrs. Brown made the statement to him heretofore related and to which he ahswered that he was in fun. Appellant stated that at this time he started to get up from his chair and go into his room to get some papers to be used in surveying that day; that at
There is nothing in the record showing that there had ever been any ill feeling between appellant and his son.
From this statement of facts, it appears that the commonwealth’s theory is that the killing by appellant of his son was felonious and without justification, and that it is appellant’s theory that he killed his son accidentally when attempting to use his pistol in his necessary self-defense against the assault of his son’s wife.
Appellant compláins of instructions numbers 2, 3, 4 and 5. Instruction No. 2 is erroneous in so far as it relates to the manner in which appellant handled and discharged the pistol. He was entitled to the ordinary instruction on voluntary manslaughter. On another trial, the court should reform instruction No. á so as it will bo as follows:
‘‘If the jury shall believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that in this county and before the finding of the indictment the defendant wilfully and feloniously in sudden heat of passion or in sudden affray and without previous malice, shot at and killed the deceased with a pistol, or if you shall believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendaiit, D. T. Beaty, in this county, and before the finding of the indictment wilfully, feloniously and without previous malice, shot at Nannie Belle Beaty with a pistol, or was aiming to shoot her, and this was not in his necessary or apparently necessary self-defense, and the shot struck the deceased, T. G-. Beaty, although same was not intended for him, you 'will find the defendant guilty of voluntary manslaughter, and fix his punishment at confinement in the penitentiary for a period of not less than two nor more than twenty-one years, in your discretion.”
“If you shall believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt, that in this county and before the finding of the indictment, the defendant, D. T. Beaty, willfully, not in his necessary' or reasonably apparent necessary self-defense, drew or attempted to draw a pistol upon Nannie Belle Beaty, but with no intention of shooting’ and killing her or shooting at her with such intent, and that while doing so the deceased, T. G. Beaty, interfered for the purpose of preventing trouble or stopping the trouble then in progress between the defendant and Nannie Belle Beaty, and that while so attempting to disarm the said defendant, or to stop the difficulty between them, the pistol then in the hands of the defendant, was unintentionally discharged by the defendant and the deceased thereby shot and killed, aud that the defendant had reasonable grounds to believe and did believe that, there was no danger in handling the said pistol as' he did, and that said killing resulted from the careless' use of said weapon by defendant, then you should find him guilty of involuntary manslaughter and fix his punishment at a fine and imprisonment in the county jail, in ;your. discretion. ’ ’
Under the facts of this case, there is nothing upon which to base an instruction for involuntary manslaughter. The case made by the testimony for the commonwealth, is one of murder or voluntary manslaughter, and as presented by the defendant, is one of self-defense or accidental shooting. If he drew the pistol only to frighten Nannie Belle Beaty and cause her to desist beating him with the stick, and his son grabbed the pistol and in the scuffle it was accidentally discharged, appellant should not be charged with the careless or negligent handling of the pistol in the scuffle. ■
Instruction No. 4 is with reference to the degrees of the offense, and directs the jury to find-him guilty of the lesser if they have any doubt as to which he is guilty of. This instruction is subject to the same criticism as No. 3, and on another trial the court should give in lieu thereof the following:
“If you shall believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant has been proven guilty, but have a reasonable doubt from the evidence as to whether his crime be willful murder as charged in the
Instruction No. 5. is as follows:
“Although you may believe from the evidence be-3rond a reasonable doubt that the defendant, D. T. Beaty, shot and killed the deceased, T. G-. Beaty, yet if you shall further believe from the evidence 'that at the time the pistol was discharged which resulted in the death of T. G. B'eaty, the defendant in good faith believed and had reasonable grounds to believe that he was in danger of losing his life Or suffering great bodily harm at the hands of Nannie Belle Beaty, and there appeared to the defendant exercising a reasonable judgment at the time and under the circumstances no other safe, apparent and available means of averting the impending real or to him apparent danger without retreating, then he had the right to use such force as was reasonably necessary to protect himself from .such impending injury or harm, and if so acting drew the pistol and the same was without carelessness on his part accidentally discharged,' thereby killing T. G. Beaty, then the defendant was acting in self-defense, and you will find him not guilty.”
This instruction was very prejudicial.to appellant. Under it, the jury could not acciuit him although they believed he had reasonable grounds to and did. believe that lie was in danger of losing his life cr suffering great bodily harm at the hands of Nannie Belle Beaty, and that he believed that he had no reasonable means to avert the danger except by using the pistol in his defense, for the court told the jury at the close of the instruction, in .effect, that they must also believe that appellant handled the pistol carefully before they could acciuit him. On another trial, in lieu of this instruction, the court should give the following:
“Although the iurv may believe from the evidence beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant, I). T. Bentv, shot and killed T. G. Beaty, yet. if vou shall further believe from the evidence that at the time the pistol was discharged, which resulted in the death of said T. G. Beaty, the defendant, in good faith, believed and had reasonable grounds to believe that he was in danger of losing his life or suffering great bodily harm at the hands of Nannie Belle Beaty, and there appeared to
The witness Westmoreland further testified that when he arrived at Beaty’s house, he said to T. G. Beaty in ihe presence of appellant:
“ ‘Harve, you certainly will not let this pass. I want you to prosecute my father.’ And I told him I would if no one else would, not.”
This was objected to by appellant, and the court overruled the objections. This was. incompetent testimony. It does not pretend to give any fact or circumstance connected with the difficulty, nor is there anything in it that called for an answer from appellant, although it was said in his presence. We are also of the opinion that the court erred to appellant’s prejudice in directing the jury not to consider the sentence in the-dying declaration of T. G. Beaty, as proved by C. P. Huff, to-wit: “I think it was ho accident.” Appellant was entitled to have this ■ go to the jury. It tended to show that T. G. Beaty was not certain that his father intentionally shot him. In the case of Coyle v. Commonwealth, 122 Ky., 781; 29 Ky. Law Rep. 340, this court, in discussing the admissibility of dying declarations as evidence, said that if such a statement is introduced the defendant should be permitted to introduce any statement made afterwards by the deceased, for the purpose of lessening or destroying the force and effect thereof. If it is proper to show such statements made afterwards, it is certainly proper to prove a statement made as a part of and in connection with the dying declaration.
For these reasons, the judgment of the lower court is reversed, and remanded for further proceedings consistent herewith.